Evening Star Newspaper, July 6, 1926, Page 33

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WOMAN'S PAGE Study of Results in Washing Ray BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Now that rayon has come’to take such an important place in clothing, the -best way to wash it should be found out. For example, rayon RAYON LINGERIE WHEN PROP- ERLY, DRIED 'SELDOM RE- QUIRES' IRONING. should not he ‘rubl Swish it about in soapy water, & ress it occas- sionally with the < Avoid rub- bing soap directly ongit, but make a good suds from soab -’ flakes, liguid soap or dissolved bits of a cake of soap. Since no rubbing is right, the swishing .and swirling of the articles must be thorough. Washing ma- chines give good action for this, but hand-done . laundry, can be equally efficient. e Never wash ayon with rings on :your of course, the smooth wedding: ring. See that “fingernails are smooth. - It is. surprising - the -amount: of havoc rings or fingernails ‘can’ido - it _they are the least bit rough -and catch ever so slightly in the strands of the weave. 3 Do Not W Rayon.. Rayon should not ‘be” is also true of loose woven ‘tabrics nets. It “will _ruin them. While nothing quite so disastrous is Iikely to happen to silk stockings, It certainly is not good for;them to be the water out Jy. lay articles in a clean old press and squeeze without -actually twisting the towel around. ~When taking from the towel, pull the things into_shape before hanging them wel, and the sun. y Hanging Out Rayon. . A word about hanging out rayon articles moy be helpful. Hang them lengthwise, so that the weight of the water that runs down the fabric will tend to give them the right torm. Hanging = rayon _articles ¢ se makes = them _stretch in just’ the wrong way. They lose shape. ' Gar- ments keep their shape best when laid. on a towel to dry or put on coat hangers. Shift them occasionally, if on the hangers, so that the ends of the wood- do not make tiny stretched places in the weive. Do not force the (:“rylnt by intense heat. This is harm- MENU FOR A DA BREAKFAST. Sliced Peaches. Dry Cereal with. Cream. Corned Beef Hash, Chili Sance. - Bran Muffins. Doughnuts.” Coffee. LUNCHEON. Salmon Croquettes. Green Peas. , Hearts of Lettuce, Russian Dressin; This | 5. Irish ‘Moss Blanc Mange. Cookles, Iced Tea. DINNER.- Broiled Ham. Lyonnaise Potatoes. Creamed Carrots. Banana Fritters, Lemon Sauce. “ Raspberry Shortcake. Cofree. DOUGHNUTS. Mix 1 large cup sugar and 1 teaspoonful butter together, add 1 well beaten egg. % cup milk (sweet or sour), 1 teaspoonful lemon flavoring and pinch nut- meg, 2 cups flour, 1 small t spoonful salt and 1% teaspoon- fuls baking powder. Mix all until quite stiff, roll out on well floured board and cut. Fry in- cloth takes up Il the grease. SALMON \OQUETTES. One and three-quarters cups cold flaked salmon, few grains cayenne, 1. cup thick - white sauce, 1 ' teaspoonful lemon Jjuice, salt. Add sauce to sal- mon, then . add seasoning. Spread on plate to cool. Shape, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs agafn. Fry in deep fat and . BANANA. FRITTERS. Yolks 2 eggs, beaten well; add 3% cup milk or .water, 1 table- spoontul olive oil, 1 saitspoonful salt,-1 teaspoonful sugar and 1. cup flour or eno to, make & -ready to fat. Serve with lemon sauce. on the line or leaving on a dry towel in | ~ somsumfis g '| tamily, no home. Even my See, Jimmy?- See what time I had on the Fourt (Copyright, 1926.) What Tomorrow Means to You :f BY MARY BLAKE, Cancer. Tomorrow’s planstary aspects are favorable—distinctly so until sun- down. They then become adverse and discouraging. The signs denote that deals involving land or mining ents will be especlally succes: ful, if initiated ' under the day' ausplces. It is also a good oppor- tunity for the execution of contracts or agreements. All litigation should be avoided. Travel can be safely in- dulged in. After dusk, you must make ‘an effort to control your emo- tions. There will be sensad a_desire to be captious, fault-finding and un. " generous. -Relaxation and light rec reation will obviate these difficulties. Children born tomorrow will enjoy exuberant health during infancy, but in their teens will not be so fortu- nate. The signs indicate that they will, at' this period, experience :at least one serious ailment, which, to ‘be suecessfully overcome, must in- volve much care and patient atten- tion, Their dispositions will be very gae":lhlc, and nlm;tctlve. uml.he even their grade of intelligence vot very high, their personalities will carry -them over and through diffi- cult places. They will possess, in wuddition, much moral courage, and reverses will never discourage them, nor failure cause any let-up in their s, If tomorrow is your birthday, you possess t ambition, and are ca- pable as_well as industrious. In your efforts to achieve your desires, vou are not always careful of your choice of methods, sometinies tread on the toes of other people, whose good will you would have done well to cul- tivate. You have a masterful disposi- tion, and are more or less domineer: ing. This dogs not, of course,: ar Mh::am with whom you are as- soci 3 s You can be generous, ‘kindly and sympathetic, when being so ‘does not, in your opinion, interfere with any “{of your plans or- policies. < If you ‘would , ind_not-leave behind 4t =ny life, o1 ‘witl fadte. 4 5 ‘Well known persons born on that -|date ‘are Phillip S. Physick, physi- BEDTIME STORIES * reomros Danny’s Disappearance. Ths M AR, 1 R ¢ But being thouxhtless give, Jut little thought to. .:“'i.fi'&‘{' Perhaps some of you reémember’ W. BURGESS the Man Bird itself was a man-made thing and could mot hurt him. He anny had their long journey to the Sunny South and back in it.- “I'll just elimb up in it and have a how once upon a time the great Man [ peek,” 8sald Danny to himeelf. I Bird, as- all the_ little ‘people of the | won't tell: Nanny: what I'm going to Green Forest and the Green Meadows |do. What she doesn't know wom't call an airplane, carried Danny and | hurt her. Nanny Meadow Mouse . way down| So in the moonlight Danny, watch- South. That Man Bird had been left | ing his chance when Nanny was busy on the Green Meadows by a cousin |elsewhere, slipped away and went of Farmer Brown's Boy who was an |over to the airplane. . He climbed up aviator. While it was there Dammy [in it. Somehow" it seemed quite lke nd Nanny had made a nest in it,|home. He ran all over the inside of 'Cnd when it had flown away for the |it, poking his little nose into every Sunny South they had been carried |corner. The little cupboard in which > he and Nanny had had their nest was partly open. Danny slipped in. There was ' some cotton waste in there. Now, cotton waste is' clan and surgeon; Mrs. Sarah P. Bar- ton (Fanny Fern), author; Jephtha H. Wade, early promoter ‘of telegra lines; Miriam C. ) Harris, author; T, Mitchell Prudden, physiclan, and Richard Carle, actor. (Copyright, 1926.) To Remove a Cinder. 1 thank him for the h he curled up and began | ight away he thi and | Pody- #I'LL, JUST CLIMBUP-IN IT AND | A v, HAVE:A PEEK,” SAID DANNY TO HIMSELF.:% | ¥ along. When' - théy were brought back Danny and Nanny declared that they never would hav ything more to do with.a Man Bi *¢ They had not: seen the Man Bird again_for more than a year. Then one -day 'they heard that familiar sound In the air, and, looking up, saw the airplane coming lower and lower over the Green Meadows, until it had stopped not far from where they were then living. The aviator Jeft i, and. went up to Farmer |- Brown's touse. All that day and all who lived there came as near as they 5 dared to look gt it TR - Nanny Meagow Mouse % i o 2 nothing would tnduce her to go near | ASa man's mind works, so will he it. Danny felt much the same way. | Walki If his mind functions in a For two days and ome night Danny kept away. Then “hi8 “euriosity"got the better of himi' He really was rot afraid of it. {is, he knew. that For instance — have P { may be put into the eye. Adults, ‘as_well as chifdfen, natu- rally want to rub an eye that has caught a einder or some other foreign In the majority. of cases na-. TUESDAY, JUL 'A»l"etiei' to All Wives Written in the Heart‘é Blood of One Woman—How to Cure Your Childhood Romance Hangover—Questions Aswered, sy T read 1n your column & teaving‘a Dm MISS DIX: ' The pther !:vm, e o with ‘adother AT 1 met. a dancer and always out for pleasure. I thought 1 hhn*ndhli‘myhnmn‘lw Vo ( T was happy for a little while, but lm ounid out that this ;umlyo”ong«mmyhuhnd.mlau- time he grew tired of me and . Now,at the age of §0 I have to support myself. I lave children scorn me because . h them. My -husband is married - again,. prosperous, ‘happy, . punished for our sins, but by them. “Answer: 1 commend this letter to the ‘hundreds ‘women who write to me that plodding finm and that they have. fallen, sheiks, and are' thin of forsaking their husbal ‘woman's letter tells the fale of what happens to > unfaith more poignan broken and bruised heart. no 3 not tly than I ean do it. For it is written ‘in the hlood of’ his wife with a reasonable amu Amo of {to eat, to feed her spiritually u“?oll &s bodily. that the man is lacking in ordinary-intelligence temperament into consideration and who does not craves at home, : ' But the point T am trying to make is that, no matter even isn't all her fondest fancy painted, if he is good and Kind to her, no right to throw up her job just because she is no longer ent amused at hdme, and because, as an old colored friend of mine say: lost her taste for him."” . » < In ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, she is punished bjtterly for her wrongdoing, for she finds that life isn’t all dancing. anywhere. that lovers soon gease to love, and that gay Lotharios have faults which make the defects of even stodgy husbands appear kohinoors of virtue, Above and heyond all, she finds.that to be happy one has to be right with one’s own soul and have one's own self-respect, and that is something "that the quitter can néver have. 5 DOROTHY DIX. e e JEAR DOROTHY DIX: When I was in my early twenties, I was deeply in i love with a girl ut my own age, but she broke our engagement. Later met and married a much younger girl, who has been a faithful wife, a hard worker, & thrifty manager, and who has brought up a fine family for me. Recently I decided to correspond with this old swentheart of mine, who is also married, and my wife is very much upset about The letters are only of & very friendly nature, but I have never thought it/ necessary to let wife see any of them. They come to my place of business. Don't you thm my wife unreasonable? BROADMINDED. Answer: Not more than any other woman would be if she cared for her husband. Possibly she is jealous without cause, and probably after a while you will grow weary of the correspondence and drop it, anyway. Personally. I believe that there is no other such cure for the hang- over of an early. romance as to go and see the once beloved one. i, Time casts & halo over early days so that we see them, and every sne who had & part in. them, through a rosy veil that. transfigures them.®. O:r puppy loves are idealized into the grand passion, and we always have a ::ecln;o .:h;: Ln .v.mr hearts (oa ‘oq;r l;;l.t -:‘oinh;rz whom x didn’t marry. We ich more beautiful a: lect life migh been married him or her instead of the' on: we did marry. by e v r sty - But if, after 15 or 20 years, we g0 back, we are aghast. What! Is this fat, frowsy woman, who is a miserable housekepper, the siren we Inw.bnn pining for, .and. with whom we have been invidiously compari: Readion, bRy iLBOwad [t MaR the AmbIosie] OE we Rure oo toaretiics , bay-wi man ami outh ha: for 20 years? Never again. It is.all over: ‘n’:’t cunw7' eo:n'pbu. tt!n‘ So If your wife were more worldly wise, she would u; y t‘ 6 pay your first love a visit, and it is a safe bet that woru‘l.d’:r‘:l; fi'&:fi mce. However, there is one very goéd way for a broad- man the question of whether it. is wise to stir Zp l;.lubu “m::d:fi loye m g; starting A correspondence. Would you like your wife to open up a cor- respondence with one of her old lovers and to have the come secretly to her, and refuse to let you read }he:n Try it out. ROTHY DIX. 3 . = I)EAR DOROTHY DIX: First. Does love ever last? If h /s ? , why do they say that nothing ever lasts? . Second.” Why do they say khntytrn- love never runs smooth? Third. How can you prove that the one you love loves you? So many people who think they have loved get divorced. are they deceived? il A D OF DREAM! 5 Shuwer! “Don't pin your murmm ‘aphorisms énd pretty phrases. They are poor guides to go by.” Of course, love lasts somettmes, and the course of true love often runs as smooth as a mill pond. But there is no way by which you can really test love, except by time and experiepice. times what we think is the grand is only a passing fancy. Sometimes it is the love that is stonrger than life, and that lasts beyond death. 3y But the wisest man cannot.tell you beforehand which is which. DOROTHY : (Copyright. 1028.) : mx" EVERYDAY QUESTIONS “dnswered by DR. S. PARKES CADMAN | as attentively as befo 25 = Phis | Oftener than not “‘.In b %’ ra_are answered daily B from Al e %Er&m J:Eunt in {he many leiters . . LEONIA, N. J. 1 would like to know who on earc! authorized you to answer all the que: tions sent for your columns? Has th Almighty taken you into partnership? Answer--At last I have found "a kindred sspirit in the long and es- n ndents. o8 . Of in to answer in. tative “of come letter from which I have adopt- ed_the brief extract quoted above. ‘What he asks me 1 have asked my-. earnestly than done. To be | differe: Was ‘the name self more , often and 1 am singularly fortunate, however, in the. themselves. ~They are not all as candid as this particu- lar friend, but. they intly sug: gest the answers they richly merit, So does he, and here it is. T.am authorized by a free press in a free ture, if let alone, will:remove the cin. | I 2 | der by producing'tears which wash it the of the eye and|! corner. toward thence: to the cheek. 'Try to.teach |0 the children to be- patient. i this happens. If, ‘after severdl :fin«t the cinder is not dislodged, a sof castor oll or some heavy ‘The- cinder;) will adhere to the ofl and. fhus be dis- | lodged. i 5 . Méo Many Enthusisms. M‘ man ts to be Doty "85 » sheik—he Just longs f enough friends to -keep from t in the cold entirely. LT ottt TS a pretty good time A Mo brought shamie upon | pqn ) {icea that. neopls”didn't of an un- kindly short, he was out of. b Ho‘ 't understand why. ~Will some/one tell him? ; Steve, who.knows Sterling well, came forth with the information. upon being questioned. “Sterling wore Iy ierice out,” he told.me frankly. ‘‘We all liked him'at. first. He seemed so full of pep and ambition. He draw: awtully well, you know, and. the first night we all met him he was full of hops because he'd received an order to do ‘some . designs for programs. Well, we were all for him. Said we'd huiit “&round*and ‘get-him -some more assignments through amateur. thea- trical companies. seemed pleased about it. ‘““Then a week later, 'when we saw him we all asked immediately how he was gejting along with the programs. He | blank for a minute, then remembered what it was”all about. He'd given up the idea estirely, lost interest”in it. He had a new fad though—writing book reviews. Would we help him in any way we could— use our influence with ne‘u?lper men, ete. “W.‘Il' we _become indfocud ;‘I’g his epthusiasm again, and once m:\itlhtoummm. But when he fell down on this proposition, too, we got 1 4 < wi goes stirring ple up to great sympathy with hflnl.”: then letting them down altogether when something new takes his eye. ! "Wya got:fooled a dozen times with that guy, -:u then we. decided to him the: air. That might cure that the interested any more. So that solved tion. s S eelope o rep caretul use of language and in thelr | cite reverence It shoul that ministers who believe the eternal welfare of the race is Involved in their Ideas with all their might.. - Nor should we respect 4 clergyman who. uttered what he holds as divine verities in a half-hearted and fereng way. demoristrated facts. be remembered, however, | Crit oo o mol My correspondent is right to. u;i international disputes of . a -] m{n ‘which the nations may. 53»‘: It _came into. existence in 1922, through the adoption of the convenm: tion containing the court “statute” by |’ the separate action of 48 independent Its 15 judges do- ot represent na , are selected by the coun- and assembly of the League of a8 toral € “bewitehi % lexion Dear Ann: - .Here is a pitiful -ex- ‘ample of a good model gone wrong. The longlines of this dress are ex- cellerit for: tie: stoutish figure. But instead” of belfig developed in a plain material it 1s made up in a large pat- terned square designed fabric, and, of course, half’ the benefit is lost. If only people would think! Yours for thinking before doing, LETITIA. (Copyright. 1026.) the Most of Your Looks EAT AND BE HEALTHY Dinah Day’s Daily Talks on Diet The Right Food Is Watch Your Weight. The guard ecalls, “Watch your step.” When boarding a train ordi- nary care must be observed. “Stop, Look and Listen” before crossing the track, says the railroad sign. Warn- ings against physical danger are posdted for -all to We should also have some po | made, reading “Watch your weigh T!hm could be stuck up in-all sorts of places. Perhaps it would be ask- ing too great a sacrifice of the honor- able restauranteurs to head the menu card with “Fat man—watch your weight.,” Because of some such re- minder, ‘Mr. Overstout might confine himself to a simple meal instead of the heayy dinner capped with pie a'la mode, which his yearning heart desired. - The health tables, with their lists of weights for height and age are sort of guide posts to good health. Heredity and individual type will m a_ person’s: weight vary from the table to some extent. * Yet these tables are a. kind of standard by which one can check up on health. Being teo much underweight calls for building-up diet, It _is equally true that too much Stout in health’and gradu- | eight dowh to nor- eating of the fat- “Is hot heeding the dan- ger signals. A rapid gain in weight is an in- dication that one Is eating more than is necessary and probably not using the energy the food supplies. either. a loss or a gain in is' gradual. - Hard work. worry, irregular meals, take their toll in flesh. Mr.” Brown .doesn’t notice the Best Medicine this fact until he appears haggard to himself. He weighs but of curiosity and is astonished to see he has lost 15 pounds. ' Brown should conserve his strength and eat nourishing food. Excess weight creeps on gradu- ally. Bob Smith keéps letting out another notch in’ his belt and fills his suijt more snug One day he weighd himself and is amazed to see an extra 20 pounds. Bob Smith had better watch diet or he will be “that fat mai and ‘will suffer all the fat man's ill health. C. A. W.—Please tell me what a woman of 69 years, height 5 feet 3. should welgh? Iso what harmful effect, if any, bicarbonate of soda has on the human—say, a dose the size of 4 pea, daily in water. Will high blood pressure diet answer for rheumatism? Answer—For your height the health tables give for age 59, 151 pounds: for age 60-64, 140 pounds. The weight shouid remain about 140 from 60 years on. Individ- ual type will govern to some extent. Bicarbonate of soda is only a rem- edy and not a cure. Oocasionally it is necessary in certain digestive dis- orders. Diet in rheumatism is not the same as for high blood pressure. . W. B~Is it al} right to pull out the -hairs of a face mole with a tweezer? Answer— You might irritate or the mole. ve a reliable’ islist remove the desiring 1 al answers 1o their fiourd. send. sell-addrosses, stam % 10 Dinah Day. care of The Star. SRR VAT Rice.jn Milk: Wash a small cupful of rice. Put in a boiler with a quart of milk and a pinch of salt. Stir lightly with a fork to keep the rice from stickng to the bottom. When the rice is do:o and the milk looks thick, sweeten to taste and put in a grating of nutmeg. This is a nice, inexpensive dish, suit- able for children. If milk is scarce, the rice may be bofled in water until dorie, then a little milk added. Mother— always get . Quick Quaker 7/ The ‘oniy quick-cooking oats with famous Quaker Oatsflavor. The rich and toasty flavor that will win your child to this important strength- building food that every clildshould have every day is Quick Quaker. Imitations cost the same. Get the L Th e T i Sdvictisaet el to grocer wil empty Nalfpound carton of Kraft Choese. . .

Other pages from this issue: